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Don Carlos (play)

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Don Carlos (play)
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{{Short description|Historical tragedy by Friedrich Schiller}}{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}}







factoids
{{Expand German|Don Karlos (Schiller)|date=June 2011}}Don Carlos (,Schiller replaced the Portuguese spelling "Dom" with the Spanish "Don" in 1801, after Christoph Martin Wieland had made him aware of the difference.Thiel, Luzia. Freundschafts-Konzeptionen im späten 18. Jahrhundert: Schillers "Don Karlos" und Hölderlins "Hyperion". Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann, 2004, {{ISBN|978-3-8260-2744-4}}, p. 15. {{IPA-de|dɔn ˈkaʁlɔs ɪnˈfant fɔn ˈʃpaːni̯ən|-|De-Don Karlos, Infant von Spanien.ogg}}) is a (historical) tragedy in five acts by Friedrich Schiller; it was written between 1783 and 1787 and first produced in Hamburg in 1787.

Plot

The title character is Carlos, Prince of Asturias and the play as a whole is loosely modeled on historical events in the 16th century under the reign of King Philip II of Spain. Don Carlos is a Prince of Spain, given to the Spanish Inquisition by his father (who also wants to marry Carlos' lover) due to his Libertarian creeds. Another great Romantic character is the Marquis of Posa dying for the liberty of the Dutch Republic as well as ruling Catholic Spain during the Reformation and the Counter-Reformation.

Ambiguity in depiction

In 1982, Lesley Sharpe argued that with Don Carlos, Schiller moved away from character-based drama, and that the play's universe "casts a shadow of ambiguity" on its characters because of the complexity of the situation.JOURNAL, Sharpe, Lesley, 1982, Schiller and Goethe's "Egmont",weblink The Modern Language Review, 77, 3, 629–645, 10.2307/3728071, 3728071, 0026-7937,

Reception

According to Schiller himself, the two main criticisms of Don Carlos were that it lacked unity and that the actions of the Marquis Posa were implausible. In Briefe über Don Carlos (1788{{Citation|last1=Garland|first1=Henry|title=Briefe über Don Carlos|date=1997|url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198158967.001.0001/acref-9780198158967-e-775|work=The Oxford Companion to German Literature|publisher=Oxford University Press|language=en|doi=10.1093/acref/9780198158967.001.0001|isbn=978-0-19-815896-7|access-date=2021-05-15|last2=Garland|first2=Mary}}), he himself claimed that two acts is too little time for a gradual development of Philip's trust in Posa. Schiller did defend Posa's actions with arguments from character.Rudiger Gorner claimed in Standpoint that Kenneth Tynan once criticized Don Carlos as "a Spanish tragedy composed of themes borrowed from Hamlet and Phèdre",MAGAZINE, Gorner, Rudiger, 2009-10-22, Schiller's Poetics of Freedom,weblink Standpoint, english, 2021-09-17, 17 September 2021,weblink dead, though according to The Guardian's Michael Billington, Tynan was actually writing about Schiller's play Mary Stuart (1800) after seeing a 1958 performance of that work at The Old Vic.WEB, Billington, Michael, 2005-01-29, Why is Schiller suddenly back in favour?,weblink live, 2021-09-17, The Guardian, en,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140917160739weblink">weblink 17 September 2014, Sharpe claimed that Schiller's defenses of Posa are unsuccessful because the play is not character-based in the first place, though she also said that Schiller's overall discussion of the play ultimately does "less than justice [...] to the play as a work of art". Gorner argued that the "sheer musicality of Schiller's verse" is shown by such works as Don Carlos, as well as The Robbers (1781) and Intrigue and Love (1784).

Opera adaptations

Several operas have been composed on the basis of the play:

English translations and stage adaptations

  • BOOK, Don Carlos, Prince Royal of Spain: An Historical Drama from the German of Frederick Schiller,weblink 1798, London, W. Miller, {{Dead link|date=November 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  • BOOK, Don Carlos, Boylan, R. D., DoDo Press, 2007, 978-1-4065-3895-3, Reprint of an 1872 translation.
  • BOOK, Don Carlos and Mary Stuart, Hilary Collier, Sy-Quia, Peter, Oswald, Peter Oswald, Oxford University Press, 2008, 978-0-19-954074-7, Reprint of a 1996 translation (out-of-print).
  • BOOK, Don Carlos, Poulton, Mike, Mike Poulton, Nick Hern Books, 2005, 978-1-85459-857-8, Poulton's adaptation was directed by Michael Grandage in a well-reviewed staging.NEWS, Don Carlos, The Stage: Reviews, Highfield, John, 4 October 2004,weblink NEWS, Billington, Michael, Don Carlos. Gielgud, London, The Guardian, 4 February 2005,weblink
  • BOOK, Schiller: Volume Two: Don Carlos, Mary Stuart, MacDonald, Robert David, Robert David MacDonald, Oberon Books, 2006, 978-1-84002-619-1, MacDonald's adaptation was first staged in Edinburgh in 1995. It is a verse translation in iambic pentameter; Mary Carole McCauley wrote, "MacDonald creates a sense of ease within his 10-syllable metric lines by using modern idioms, and what the translation lacks in a certain lush richness, it may make up for in accessibility."NEWS, 'Don Carlos' gets seal of approval, McCauley, Mary Carole, The Baltimore Sun, 23 January 2001,weblink Review of the 2001 production in Baltimore.

Influence on English-language literature and film

Jeffrey L. High (CSULB) has found influences of Schiller's plays on the screenplays for several Hollywood films, and in particular suggests a close correspondence between Don Carlos and the screenplay for Star Wars (1977).BOOK, Who Is This Schiller Now?: Essays on His Reception and Significance, High, Jeffrey L., Martin, Nicholas, Oellers, Norbert, Introduction: Why is this Schiller [Still] in the United States?, High, Jeffrey L., 15,weblink Camden House, 2011, 978-1-57113-488-2, Schiller experts unfamiliar with Star Wars could place most of the characters with the corresponding Don Karlos characters at a glance at the movie poster. ... The reader will be hard pressed to distinguish the basic plot and character constellation of Star Wars from that of Don Karlos without reference to the specific period and galaxy in question.,

See also

Further reading

Notes

{{Reflist|group=nb}}

References

{{Reflist}}

External links

  • {{Commons category-inline|Don Carlos (Friedrich Schiller)}}
{{Works by Schiller}}{{Authority control}}

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